10 year warranty on the antenna,
3 year warranty on the electronics,Tracker transmitters
have 1 year warranties

10 year warranty on the antenna,
3 year warranty on the electronics,Tracker transmitters
have 1 year warranties

10 year warranty on the antenna,
3 year warranty on the electronics,Tracker transmitters
have 1 year warranties

10 year warranty on the antenna,
3 year warranty on the electronics,Tracker transmitters
have 1 year warranties

10 year warranty on the antenna,
3 year warranty on the electronics,Tracker transmitters
have 1 year warranties

Return Policy

14 Days

14 Days

14 Days

14 Days

14 Days

Notes:

Tracker Receivers will work with most quality tracking collar brands

Tracker Tracking Systems are one of the smallest receivers on the
market

* Range - When manufacturers state the range of a dog tracking
collar they are referring the the distance the collar can be detected over a flat
and unobstructed terrain. These distances are quoted with under ideal circumstances;
a clear line of sight and a fully charged transmitter. Range can be reduced with
differences in terrain or a weak collar. However, all the dog tracking collars we
carry are engineered to work in the toughest terrains without dramatically compromising
or weakening the signal.

Radio Bands / Radio Frequencies - All Dog tracking collar
systems operate on one or more different bands. Some models are capable of handling
a single band while others are capable of tracking collars on multiple bands. The
FCC has approved the following bands for North America - 216, 217, 218, 219, and
220 mhz. Each band is then divided into a thousand different frequencies from XXX.000
to XXX.999. If your dog tracking collar system is capable of tracking multiple collars
on a single band (for example the 217 band) be sure you order collars with a large
enough frequency gap to avoid overlapping. Depending on the receiver you choose
you will be able to track from 1 to 1000 dogs.

Channels - Channels refer to the number of tracking
settings on a receiver. The more channels the more dogs the unit can track
. Receivers with a set number of channels usually spread the bandwidth across
the channels in increments of 10 kHz. . Example: If a unit has 2 channels
it means there are two settings on the receiver which can simultaneous track two
dogs.